To feed the dross
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǔ Z ā ochu ò L í, which means to eat lees and drink thin wine. The pursuit of drunkenness. It also refers to Qu Zhi's following the common customs. It also refers to the beautiful and intoxicating writing. It is the same as "nurturing the dross". From Wang Sun Fu.
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym: to nourish the dross
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in life
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian of the Western Han Dynasty wrote in historical records: biographies of Qu Yuan and Jia Sheng: "everyone is drunk, why not feed their bad and sip their wine? Why did Huaijin hold on to Yu and let her see him? " For example: Wang Sun Fu written by Wang Yanshou in the Eastern Han Dynasty: "we are willing to suffer from human beings, and we are good at sucking grains."
Chinese PinYin : bǔ zāo chuò lí
To feed the dross
Help from the top and push from the bottom. shàng yuán xià tuī
build up one 's strength to avenge an insult. shí nián shēng jù
marry into sb . 's house in an open , correct manner. míng méi zhèng lǐ